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I was a child my world was the homeland around Cau Ke Market in Tra
Vinh Province, green or yellow paddy fields waiting for the harvest
season. It was not until my father took me to Ba Mi or Huu Thanh
Commune in Vinh Long Province that I had the chance to see the ancient
charnel house of Huynh Ky, one of ten notorious landlords of the Mekong
Delta region a long time ago. For many years this beautiful relic has
remained in my mind as the wonder of my home country.
My
brother used to tell me about the house when he went to play there.
Located on a high mound, people from the main street could reach the
charnel house on a gravel road bordered with two lines of lanterns,
like bodyguards protecting a royal palace. Sometimes, a mild fragrance
from the many mango trees around the house filled the air. There was
also a swimming pool on the man-made hill.
My childhood had passed by the time I had another opportunity to visit
the mysterious and solemn place. Now the gravel road has been replaced
with asphalt, and the house has become a forgotten ruin.
Situated on a high floor, the charnel house includes a hexagonal tower
surrounded by five similar towers. From afar, the towers look like a
Western castle with pointed roofs, as high as 12 meters. The tower in
the center is the last resting place of landlord Huynh Ky and his two
wives.
Khmer pagoda features can also be found at the corners of the outer
walls of the towers by a bird-headed genie lifting the dome. The inside
surface is engraved or painted carefully with many patterns, even on
the ceiling.
In 1944, architect Tran Cong Quan and workers from Soc Trang and Ben
Tre provinces spent three years reconstructing the special building
from local bricks, stones and cement from Haiphong City. It is designed
with a mixture of architectural styles from China, France, Kinh and
Khmer ethic groups.
As Huynh Ky’s offspring have lived overseas for many years, the
building has been devastated by time and local residents. The three
graves, the main entrance and wall patterns are considerably damaged
to. I myself am disappointed at the asphalted road which was not built
for preserving the house but for easier traveling to the dumping ground
nearby.
Watching a beautiful relic of the homeland turn into a ruins, I regret
that the cultural and architectural building might one day no longer
exist.
Source SGT
Vietnam Heritage sites 11 days/ 10nights
Vietnam Experience14 days/ 13 nights
Ho Chi Minh City – Mekong Delta - Can Tho – Soc Trang
Vinh Long, Mekong Delta with homestay
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